The Bulgarian government has signed a consulting contract with UK-based company HSBC for the financial analysis for the project for the construction of the Belenenuclearpowerplant.

Bulgaria's Cabinet and Prime MinisterBoyko Borisov in particular have made it clear that the results from HSBC's financial appraisal of the Beleneproject,
i.e. whether it is economically feasible, will be decisive with respect
to the government's final decision on whether to go ahead with the project whose price has been a bone of contention with the selected executer, Russian state corporation Rosatom.

Bulgaria will be paying HSBC EUR 2.7 M for its services plus 0.95% of the end price of the BeleneNPP if it is realized, according to reports in the Bulgarian press Tuesday morning.

The Bulgarian government's contract with HSBC itself was sealed late
Monday night via fax, according to the Ministry of Economy, Energy, and
Tourism, as cited by the Standart daily.

The HSBC experts will be doing their work on the financial appraisal of the project for Bulgaria's second NPP in London but are also expected to visit Bulgaria within the two-month deadline that they have to complete their work as last Bulgaria's National Electric Company NEK and Rosatom subsidiary Atomstroyexport signed a 12th annex to their expired agreement stipulating that a decision about the fate of the Beleneproject should be arrived at by June 1, 2011.

The consulting company is supposed to analyze the project thoroughly and advise the Bulgarian government regarding its final price
as well as its potential restructuring. Under the consultancy contract,
HSBC is also supposed to participate in the search for strategic
investors for Belene as efforts of the Borisov Cabinet have not proven very successful in that regard.

The Bulgarian Energy Holding, the parent company of NEK,
picked in November 2010 HSBC, one of the world's biggest banks, for a
consultant to help it decide whether the project is economically feasible.

Six candidates had submitted documents to bid in the tender opened by the Bulgarian Energy Holding for Belene consultant - HSBC, Societe Generale, KPMG in a consortium with McGuire, Rothschild, Argil, and Ernst & Young.

"With this step the project enters a crucial stage. The conclusions of the consultant will be the answer to the question whether or not Belenenuclearpowerplant will be built," Bulgarian Economy and Energy Minister TraichoTraikov said on Sunday regarding the signing of the consultancy contract with HSBC.

The statement comes just days after Traikov drew the ire of Prime MinisterBoyko Borisov after he slammed and dismissed the National Electric Company head KrasimirParvanov for signing an agreement with Rosatom's subsidiary Atomstroyexport that potentially threatens Bulgaria's national interests by obliging the Bulgarian government to reach a final agreement with the Russians on Belene by June 1, 2001.

The plant was originally to be built by Russian company Atomstroyexport for EUR 4 B, plus "escalation costs" including inflation and other
factors - a condition accepted by the Stanishev Cabinet (2005-2009); the
Borisov Cabinet, however, has demanded a firmly set price from the very
beginning apparently afraid that the Russians might demand more money
using the escalation costs clause.

The firm had signed a contract with the previous, Socialist-led government, swept from power by Borisov's conservative GERB party swept in last year's July elections.

Due to the delays in the launch of the construction works, stalled over price disputes and funding problems, Russia now says the project construction price should be increased to EUR 6.3 B, while Bulgaria's government has been haggling for a price as low as EUR 5 B.

Bulgaria's new center-right government suspended the construction of the nuclearpowerplant last year until it finds a new investor and funds to complete the project at Belene, on the Danube, 180 km northeast of the capital Sofia.

In November 2010, shortly after a visit to Sofia by Russian PM Putin, Bulgaria's National Electric Company NEK and Russian state company Rosatom signed a memorandum providing for a final fixed price for the two reactors of EUR 6.298 B.

According to the non-binding memorandum expiring on March 31, 2011, Bulgaria's NEK will have a share of 51% in the BeleneNPP, Rosatom - a share of 47%, Finnish company Fortum - a share of 1%, and French company Altran Technologies - a share of 1% with an option to increase it. Serbia has
expressed interest in acquiring a share of 5%-10% but the talks for that
have not been finalized yet.

After it was first started in the 1980s, the construction of Bulgaria's second nuclearpowerplant at Belene on the Danube was stopped in the early 1990s over lack of money and environmental protests.

The BeleneNPP was de facto
frozen in the fall of 2009 when the previously selected strategic
investor, the German company RWE, which was supposed to provide EUR 2 B
in exchange for a 49% stake, pulled out.

In mid-March 2011, apparently acting on concerns caused by the situation in Japan's FukushimaNPP after the recent devastating earthquake there, the European Commission confirmed that it wants to reexamine the BeleneNPPproject - once Bulgaria finds an investor for it - even though it already approved it back in 2007.